Press Releases | September 24, 2025
Countering PhRMA’s legal claims, P4AD continues to defend the historic Medicare Negotiation Program by amplifying the experiences of patients with high drug prices.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, Patients For Affordable Drugs (P4AD) filed its fifth patient-centered amicus brief defending the Medicare Negotiation Program – this time in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, where PhRMA is appealing its failed attempt to strike down the law in Texas. The case is part of the industry-wide legal crusade aimed at dismantling the 2022 prescription drug law’s historic price negotiation reform and restoring Big Pharma’s unchecked monopoly power.
The brief highlights the real-world impact of lower prices for patients and pushes back on PhRMA’s recycled legal arguments — which have already been rejected 14 times.
This is the fifth amicus brief P4AD has filed on behalf of patients. You can find the full written brief HERE.
“Big Pharma spent decades rigging the drug-price system to maintain their monopolies and keep prices high at the expense of patients,” said Merith Basey, Executive Director of Patients For Affordable Drugs. “Our amicus brief puts patients firmly in the center of this fight, dismantling the industry’s tired legal arguments and reaffirming the transformational power of Medicare negotiation to secure a better deal for Americans. It’s the U.S. v. Pharma, and we stand firmly with the millions of patients counting on this historic reform.”
P4AD’s amicus brief underscores how Medicare price negotiation will deliver savings to patients in our community, including:
Key Points from the Amicus Brief:
The amicus brief also highlights the wide-scale economic impact of Medicare negotiations:
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Patients For Affordable Drugs is the only national patient advocacy organization focused exclusively on policies that lower prescription drug prices. We empower and mobilize patients by amplifying their experiences with high drug prices to hold those in power to account and fight to shape and achieve system-changing policies that make prescription drugs affordable for all people in the United States. P4AD does not accept funding from organizations that profit from the development and distribution of drugs. To learn more, visit PatientsForAffordableDrugs.org